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The anti-secrecy international organisation was founded in 2006 by Australian Julian Assange. The non-profit group calls itself a media organisation and also acts as an online "drop box" for anonymous sources to leak information and documents to journalists. In 2010, WikiLeaks became more prominent after releasing the "Collateral Murder" video, which showed US Army helicopter firing on a group of mostly unarmed men, two of whom were journalists.

Benedict Cumberbatch as Julian Assange,left, with Daniel Bruhl as Daniel Domscheit-Berg during the filming of "The Fifth Estate," in Reykjavik, Iceland. Photo: AP

The world premiere of The Fifth Estate, a ripped-from-the-headlines drama about Julian Assange and the creation of WikiLeaks, will open the 38th Toronto International Film Festival, which typically yields a number of Oscar contenders.

Widely considered the kick-off to Oscar season, the this year festival will feature films starring Meryl Streep, Idris Elba, Colin Firth, Chiwetel Ejiofor, George Clooney and others, organisers said on Tuesday. The 11-day event opens on September 5.

Elba takes on the lead role in Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom, a dramatisation of the life of legendary anti-apartheid South African leader Nelson Mandela, who has been hospitalised with a lung infection for the last six weeks.

This marks the third straight year the festival has opened with a high-profile title, after years of using the opening slot to highlight smaller Canadian films.

“As soon as we saw it, we knew that it would set the right tone for opening night. It’s a movie about what we thought is one of the most important issues of the day - information and who controls it,” said Cameron Bailey, the festival’s artistic director.

In addition to his turn as Assange, Cumberbatch also stars in August: Osage County, a star-studded family drama set in Oklahoma that also features Julia Roberts, Meryl Streep, Ewan McGregor, Abigail Breslin and Chris Cooper.

Gravity, a thriller set in space starring George Clooney and Sandra Bullock, will be screened at the festival. Gravity is director Alfonso Cuaron’s first feature film since Children of Men in 2006.

Arrested Development actor Jason Bateman will make his directorial debut with Bad Words, a comedy in which he stars as a 40-year-old who enters a national spelling competition and dominates his prepubescent challengers.

Blue is the Warmest Color, the lesbian love story that won the Palme d’Or for best film at the Cannes Film Festival, will have its North American debut at the festival.

Launched in 1976, Toronto’s film festival ranks among the world’s top movie events and often serves as a launchpad for international films seeking North American distribution.

The Toronto festival has a solid track record of unearthing films that go on to succeed at the Academy Awards, such as Slumdog Millionaire and The King’s Speech, which won best film Oscars. Last year’s winner of the People’s Choice award, the festival’s top prize, was Silver Linings Playbook, an Oscar nominee for best picture.